Video Transitions and effects

putzz wrote on 3/25/2003, 4:57 PM
I have been toying with this program (vegas 3) for a bit now (new hobby) and it rocks. However, my friend has pinnacle 8.3 with the latest Hollywood fx transtions on it...and well....they flat out are awesome trasitions....is it possible to somehow get more transitions like hollywood fx on my vegas program???

Comments

FuTz wrote on 3/25/2003, 5:15 PM
You could go to "www.debugmode.com" to get the free 3D pack plus the Win Morph plug-in. That would be a good starter. there's more to come from Satish (the guy who develops those apps) and you can do a search with "plug-ins" or "transitions" on this forum, I'm sure you'll find something.
Also, you can buy plug-ins from Pixelan.
SonyDennis wrote on 3/25/2003, 5:23 PM
Also, for Vegas 3, there is the "Vegas Plug-In-Pack" which includes some 3D transitions. These same plug-ins are now included in Vegas 4.

///d@
sms wrote on 3/25/2003, 5:45 PM
This has been said before but I think it's worth repeating. 3-D transitions are nice but be careful on using too many. I use to edit with Pinnacle Studio and have all of the Hollywood FX transitions. When I converted to Vegas I thought I would miss the cool transitions but to my surprise I think my movies are better without them. I primarily use jump cuts, crossfades, event pan/crop and track motion to create transitions.

I still have Studio and when I really really need a 3-D transition I simply render a small avi file and import it into Studio, apply the transition and then render to avi again and import into Vegas. A bit clumsy but I don't do this often so it's fine.
wcoxe1 wrote on 3/25/2003, 8:48 PM
For what it is worth, I use perhaps 1 "interesting" transition in an hour, if that. All others are cuts or dissolves or an occasional fade to black and back. Things look SO much better without all those flashy Studio transitions, and people tell me so.

The Plug-In Pack in V4, along with the free transitions from www.debugmode.com and others are usually more than adequate for just about everything (just about). There are a few things (3) in Boris Red 2.5 that I would like to have, but at $999.99 Boris will have to wait a few thousand years.
bakerja wrote on 3/26/2003, 1:09 PM
Folks commonly forget the definition of transition. To get from one thing to another. Flips, turns, page peels, etc are great if used effectively. To "transition" from one thought to another, or one segment to another. Within a given piece, a cut is my preferred transition. Now the art is deciding where to make the cut. Whenever there is action, cut on the action. For example, you have 2 angles of a person walking through a door. Make your cut ON the action (door swinging open) not before or after the action. This one techique when adhered to will make your transitions seemless if done correctly. This rule aslo applies to talking heads. Don't cut between words, cut ON the word. Let's say you have a cut you want to make that just doesn't work no matter where you make it. Use a 3 frame dissolve to "soften" the cut. It's so fast that the eye really doesn't register it as a dissolve, but yet it looks better than a hard cut. All that being said, I do use other transitions of course when warranted. Slo-mo and dissolves are almost heaven! A dip to black and back up can be very dramatic as well. Just remember to be tasteful. Don't use transitions for the sake of reaction, ie. "wow that was a cool effect". Did the transition support the piece or make the viewer just recognize that it was a cool effect.

"A dissolve is just a cut looking for a place to happen."

JAB